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assigned to duty on the 800 miles of j
i
Texas-Mexican border yesterday, j

with" the arrival of two rangers at j
Raymondsville, Texas, in response! EJitor S:a: If tliere 15 a -hancej
to an appeal from fifty-three persons for the healthy and able bodied man,,
there against cattle thieves and ma-: out of a job' il is to go t0 work on ai

BETTER THAN THE
FAMOUS CORN BELT

the Farm, and

Finest Farms are Found in
Florida

rauders.
Along with news of the rangers'

farm and work his way up as "hired,
man" and tenant to farm ownership!

and plenty. i
A great many people have argued j
' that the chance, if it exists, is a slim j
. one. A number of reasons are given j
: such as the high price of land, the:

' cost of machinery, implements, live
stock and etc.
! Chris. Gruenther, on the other
hand, says there is a chance, and a
' good one. And he speaks from long
a:i 1 intimate familiarity with con conditions
ditions conditions in one of the most prosper prosper-'
' prosper-' ous farming sections of Nebraska,
' Platte county. In a recent issue of
' his paper, the Platte- Center Signal,

which I had the opportunity of

! glancing over recently, Mr. Guen-

ther writes:
"The man who seeks employment

farms of the corn belt can

ithin a few years earn enough to

rent a farm. If he is made of the

disposition Gov. O. B. Colquitt made
public a lengthy list of the Texas
border trouble on which his appeals
for more power to protect the boun boundary
dary boundary have been based and which ex explains
plains explains the nature of the raiders' ac activities.
tivities. activities. How fifteen rangers can furnish
any real protection along a border
800 miles long was explained in a
statement by Captain Hughes. In
some places one ranger is assigned
to patrol 100 miles of border, he
caid. These rangers, clothed with all
police power of both state and coun

ty officers, are feared by the trouble- j
makers, who know that the ranger ;
can arrest them even on suspicion.
"The rangers." said Capt. Hughes,

without regular feed on the various
prickly growths which are nearly the
only vegetation. These bad men be believe,
lieve, believe, and on good reason, based on
experience, that their arrest is cer certain
tain certain once a ranger overtakes them.

' i ...u ... : 1 1 .. i .... ..-: v. v.:.-.-.

...v,4 u k so generously that within a

n iui.il iiaic uctci utcu aiauicu. 1

years more he can buy a farm and
pay down enough to insure perma permanent
nent permanent ownership.

"This editor knows many farmers
living on land of their own, who a
dozen or fifteen years ago were hired

men on some farm. It is a well
known fact that many renters have
bought lan 1 some at fancy prices,

now and then they would scatter
under Luna in thin waterfall forma formation
tion formation and the mist reflecting circling
rainbows around her. Gorgeous!
Glorious!
.
On the Sea A Palms
"I love to drift on the sea of palms.
'Mid leafages of odorous scenes and
balms,
Where the fvinds like the dryads play play-In
In play-In pendulous mistletoe and mosses
grey;
Past hoary live oaks in whose veiled
arcades
Triumphal chariots seem just to have
passed,
And left the glimering to the birds
and bees,
Fast ghost-white herons in the cy cypress
press cypress shades,

t "i 'py r-Hiit. 1U1 1. ,y I'atiama Pacific Intern;itional Kxpo.it ion Company.
T'e Arch of the Rising Sun at the Panama-Pacific International exposi exposition,
tion, exposition, which will be crowned by a wonderful group of statuary, "The Nations
of the East." The howdah upon the elephant will be 1SS feet above the floors
of the court: the group itself will be 42 feet in height. This huge arch,
breathing the sp-r;t of the Orient, will be upon the east side of the great
Central court, the ('curt of the Sun and Stars. Upon the west side of the
court will be an arch typifying Occidental civilization.

i : i ;g i st is a t i o n not in:

j too who are always anxious and
willing to give the right kind of a
' man more than an equal chance to
rise from virtually nothing to the

iV3.ll Dersons who failed to register

Or, thPir rnpotivp district r.nn rp'. ownership of a farm

Tster at my office in Ocala any day
(Sundays excepted) between March
loth and April ISth. -D. M. Darco.
Supervisor Registration Marion Co.,
Office upstairs in court house.
' 1-3-Sat-Cm

degree than we of the stern virtues
of self denial.
In closing this article may 1 say

that our company on the Oklawaha j

river ha demonstrated that our

mucK lands pro.riio? cn:j-th:r.l more
corn to the acre than the famous

!
i

, H H is

i

111

Tcr Eustis-on-the-lakes, Wednesday.
The City of Ocala is due Wednes Wednesday
day Wednesday afternoon at 5 o'clock; motors
down stream at S o'clock Weinesday
a. m., for Palatka Thursday T cruises
upstream again Friday, and down downstream
stream downstream Saturday with passengers.
The Sharpshooter, Captain E. L.
Mills, with freight, arrived Friday
night from Palatka. This vessel will
be on this end of the line for a few
days moving cabbage from the big
Carmichael ranch to the city termi terminals
nals terminals here.
r

! The big United States drelge.
the Florida, is due in the 1 jwer river
' within ten days. The Flirida will
! have in use several naptha tenders.
The steamer Sharpshooter supplies
her.
The first foggy night of the tour tourist
ist tourist season settled down around the
Oklawaha country Saturday night.
In the Oklawaha river farms' rich

1 '"The man who is honest and w?U w?U-i
i w?U-i ir.g to work has a chance as good to to-i
i to-i day to own land as ever before.
To begin with his wages are now
j much higher; when he begins to
j rent his profits are greater and when
i he begins to own land he can always
sell his stuff for above the cost of
production in contrast with the early
settler who for many years was

obliged to sell his products for less

i than it cost to produce them.

I "After all is said and done, there
is no fiel dof endeavor in the United

States today where the same amount

of education, energy, intelligence and!

honest effort is better rewarded than j

on the productive 'farm lands of the
corn belt."
ISetter than the Corn Belt
There is in this, I believe a world
of truth. It is not a short and easy
road to wealth that is offered. But
it is the same road, neither longer
nor harder than our fathers traveled
and many of the gravest hardships
that then infested it and which they

corn lanjs or .Neurasa a;W iansas.

Corn with us is planred as a summer
crop, after we have farmed the same
gound thru the winter months and
have marketed two to three different
vegetable crops in rapid rotation: so
to the industrious farmer who would
care to become a land owner I would
suggest that he come to Florida.
David H. Kirkland.

A not tier Trial for Leo Fl unk Urfjed
by Liading Preachers of
Atlanta

Atlanta. March 1G.
ances favoring a new

Pulpit utter utter-trial
trial utter-trial for L. M.

In these

seas
The same light blooms

scenes and these."
Hezekiah Butterworth.
Old Ocala Town
We can also sing of Silver Springs
"And its fragrant solitudes.
Where the mocking-birds press 'twixt
silences
Their golden interludes.
'Tis said each spray bears a blithe blithesome
some blithesome fay,
'And the spring ,in Its depths far
down,
Is the secret home of an Indian
gnome, 9
Near old Ocala town.
An Ocala Bard in the T.-U.
Oklawaha Itiver Improvements
From the City o Ocala's log book,
Carl Mason, chronicler, Putnanr

Irish potatoes. !Capta5n Ricnards wen up into the
acres in sweet i 0kIawaha river Fridar to do snag snag-jging
jging snag-jging all the way up. She will arrive
in Silver Spring the last of the week.

A , Officers: Captain Richards; First
Most of the big rose gardens in-.. 4 .
. . . : Mate, Maxie Mason; Engineer, Buck-
th s country were trimmed in winter,!. x , T , , ,..,,
' les; Steward, D. H. Marsh. Will be
and now the young bushes are fit to. A,
. A .. .sin the Oklawaha river two or three
burst out m bloom with millions of!

e .... , niontns snagging,
roses of brilliant hues. .....

ine o:g areage rionaa win ue in
the Oklawaha within two weeks from
date; got this straight, for I am
keenins: un with the nr.-iiect. von

grant perfumed with the orange bios- , ... .
, I know. Dredge will start at the
som, enthralled in entrancing rapture r.,N. .
... ; mouth and work all the way to the

In this romantic basin of the Okla Oklawaha,
waha, Oklawaha, now Irish green tinted, fra-

; Frank, under sentence of death for unto the audience of mocking-birds, Jakes They tQlJ me t jat'tnfey would

coast l:m; s time c.hi

the At-

ot

i.

i

Candler, March 16. Mr. and Mrs.
J. D. Martsolf have terminated their
annual winter visit to their home
and orange grove here, and return returned
ed returned to their Beaver Falls, Pa., home.
Mrs. Fred Driver entertained the
W. C. T. U. members Thursday af afternoon.
ternoon. afternoon. After a business session
the hostess served refreshments and
4

a pleasant social hour was indulg-: stoically endured, have been swept

the murder of Mary Phagan 14 years
old, employe of a pencil factory of
which Frank was superinten Jent,
j were made in Atlanta churches yes-

i terday.

! Dr. L. O. Bicker, pastor of the
i First Christian church; Dr. A. R.

I Holderby, pastor of the Moore Me Me-!
! Me-! morial church and Rev. Julian S.

areo-nautical armies of many bril-;

liant hued butterfies
and sup the buds.

fly in and out

Canned Cats
The catfish catch in

be in there about five years and may
be six. Going to havu the canal, you

isee. Can then navigate a line of
j vessels from Joyful Jax. to 'Dunnel 'Dunnel-jlon,
jlon, 'Dunnel-jlon, hailing Ocala for 'palousers,"
the lower, often like they do from Jacksonville

river, after the stream runs over the ( to Sanford, with shore leave to Hast Hast-Marion
Marion Hast-Marion county herder into Putnam, is ings for "palousers." Have forty
very large. Welaka, at the mouth of ( passengers of the upriver trip Mon Mon-the
the Mon-the river on the St. Johns, is the fish j day. Expect mere tonight on Osce-market.-
Catfish are quoted higher ola from Jacksonville."

at her home in Burfcank, returning
Sunday afternoon to resume school
duties Monday.
The silver medall contest under
the auspices of thelW. C. T. U. will

ie held in the Prbyterian church

Friday evening M;fch 20. A sll-

prices for produce, are all things of
the past.
The man who starts now is as as-sured
sured as-sured an abundance of good food,
warm shelter,, companionship and
neighborly help.

(i.

No.
m..

arrives

3S leaves St. Pete -burg S:30

:20 a. m..
a. m. and

arrives 0::ala
Gainesville 3

at

3 : o S

prri-vtFs Jacksonville 7 a. m.

Baptist church, told their congrega congregations
tions congregations that they believed the state of
public feeling at the trial of the fac factory
tory factory superintendent made a fair
hearing impossible. The ministers
said they did not assert either the
innocence or guilt of Frank, but be believed
lieved believed conditions warranted a new
trial.
OCALA XOrilEIIX SCHEDULE

home until you have taken the day-that rcamed and hunted around the
light Oklawaha rivertrip. 1 southwest lakes, an event occurred
(which Sl.'el many hearts with so v
To Ocalans: Do not let the new;row The king had a four nam'.
spring was andwane until you have ei Vencna, whose rare beauty was
enjoyel ie ntpst entrancing, the ; the pricJe of the od ms Jife and an
most magnetic, the most marvelous ijo! cf the braves. Shd waS a coveted
of rher trips on board the sneed r-v,-r j ..!.i .fu

i each other as to who shojld present
, the most valuable gift when her haitl

A Lunar lUinlov j was c0Ught from the king, h fathef.
Rainbows encircled the moon Sat- But the daughter had Ulready seen
urday nifcfit, March 7th, and as the and love3 Chueleotah, iil renowned
old savin? it was the sailors delight, chief of a tribe viich Jue!t among
The nigh: phenomena was very bril- the wild groves of Silv- Springs,
liant anl extremely beautiful. The But it was a sad truth that between
scurrying, fleece 1 clouds were going
cast at a terrible pace at 10:30, and (Concluded on Page Five)

acht City of Ocala.

Improved Farms
from 20 to 500
Acres.

WE ARE NOV IN OUR NEW OFFICE

Ml

unpin

in

1VB l& 0t 1 (lit b b B

Unimproved Farm
Lands from 5 to
1,000 Acres

FLORID

A CEN

Tx A

1KAL

Orange Groves
from 5 to 50 Acres
that will -pay
from
20 to 40 per cent
on Investment.

A NEW LINE OF INITIAL STA STATIONERY
TIONERY STATIONERY AND CARDS JUST IN AT
THE COURT PHARMACY. 3-13-6t

Four of the landladies of the west

end resorts are on trial in County
Judge Smith's court this afternoon
on the charge of selling liquor with without
out without license. Messrs. Gober and Bul Bullock
lock Bullock represent the defense and Ed Edwin
win Edwin Spencer is prosecuting. There
are many interested spectators.

The K. of P. had a well attended
and interesting meeting last night.
Messrs. Frank Anthony and M. L.
Reynolds were instructed in their
duties as esquires, and both are glad
to say this morning that they know
a right smart more than they did
before.

The Star hopes that while the city
council is in session this evening,
the members will decide to do some something
thing something with those parts of South
Magnolia and Orange streets leading
to the hospital. They are not in
good shape for healthy people to
ride over, and must cause positive
agony to the sick or wounded who
have to be carried to the hospital.

A fire alarm was turned in at 2
p. m. from the little cottage oc occupied
cupied occupied by Anna Dawkins, colored,
just back of Mclver & MacKay's
warehouse. A large quantity of soot
had accumulated between the ceil ceiling
ing ceiling and the roof and was ignited by
the defective flue, and would have
caused a big fire had not the fire de department
partment department arrived in time, tore away
the ceiling and put out the fire be before
fore before it increased to a good blaze.
About $15 damage.

Mr. W. C. Blanchard has just
finished a handsome wall cabinet
for Mr. Kreger's store. It is a nice
piece of furniture and Mr. Kreger
has filled it with an attractive as assortment
sortment assortment of goods.

'Mr. B. F. Condon, local agent for
the Reo automobile, yesterday dis disposed
posed disposed of a handsome five-passenger
touring car to Mr. J. Q. Lloyd, of the
southern part of the county. The
car is a very handsome one and Mr.
Lloyd is justly proud of his purchase.

The work of tearing out the floors
in the Commercial Bank building
has- begun. The roo mformerly oc occupied
cupied occupied by the millinery parlors in
the west end of the building in
which will be located the stairway of
the rearranged structure, was the
first to be torn out.

Henry Snelling, a young citizen of
Lowell,, was taken last night with
acute appendicitis. He was brought
in this morning and placed in the
hospital and underwent an operation
this afternoon.

OPEN ALL NIGHT

The Merchant's Cafe is a first class
place to take your meals. Open night
and day. J. R. Dewey, proprie proprie-tor.
tor. proprie-tor. 2-28-tf

BEST FAMILY LAXATIVE

Beware of constipation. Use Dr.
King's New Life Pills and keep well.
Mrs. Charles E. Smith, of West
Franklin, Me., calls them "Our fam family
ily family laxative." Nothing better for
adults or aged. Get them today. 25
cents. All druggists or by mail. H.
E. Bucklin & Co., Philadelphia or St.
Louis. ad

i
Wilson W. Byles of Marion conn-'
t is in jail at Jacksonville, on ac-
count cf aa acciJent in that city:
Sunday, in which a little boy, Ronald'
Mozo. lost his life. Mr. Byles, who1
had recently arrived in Jacksonville,!
i
was driving an auto along one of the
streets, when he met a trolley car.
from which the little boy had just-

alighted. It is one of the rules of;
the road in Jacksonville that when a'
street car stops, an auto about to
pass it must stop also, but Mr. Byles
was ignorant of the rule. He drove,
on by the car and ran over the little j
boy, who came out from behind the,

car just in time to meet the auto. It

was entirely too late to stop the

auto, and the child was run over and!
fatally injured. Mr. Byles, horrified;
at the accident, lost control of the
car, which crashed into a telephone

pole and was wrecked. His brother.
Burgess Byles, was in the car with
him. Both young men are with the
Cianford Lumber Co., near Ocala.
'Mr. Byles is a membei of the Ocala
Moose lodge, and at a meeting of the
executive committee last night, Mr.
E. L. Stapp and. Mr. Heron Todd
were delegated to go to Jacksonville
and give Mr. Byles legal aid and as assurance
surance assurance of the sympathy of his
brethren in this city. There have
been a whole lot of ugly auto acci accidents
dents accidents in Jacksonville, and nobody
has been punished for any of them.

There is a fear among the friends of i
young Byles that the boy may be!
made the goat and a heavy sentence
piled on him more for other people's J

sins than his own.
A gentlemen just in from Jack Jacksonville
sonville Jacksonville says that the father of Mr.

Byles has arrived to look after the i

interests of his son. Mr. Byles' em employer,
ployer, employer, Mr. T. G. Cranford, of the
big Cranford mills, in southwest Ma Marion,
rion, Marion, has also gone to Jacksonville
to assist his young friend. A lead leading
ing leading lawyer has been retained to con conduct
duct conduct the defendant's side of the
case.

iii

On such matters as a purchase, an investment, an extension of credit,
or the management of a business, a good banker is competent to give
good, sound advice that's his business.
We are willing and anxious to advise our customers at any time.
The Ocala National Bank.
Capital and Surplus, $85,000.00..
ACTIVE TJ. S. DEPOSITARY.

BOARDERS WANTED Can furnish
rooms and table board for a few
boarders; reasonable rates. Apply
to Mrs. Annie E. Holly, 113, South
Second street, East. 3-1 0-6t
WANTED Position by young man,
married, who is well experienced
in office work and general mer merchandise
chandise merchandise business. Can furnish
A. No. 1 reference. Address box

Dunnellon, Fla. 3-7-10t

355,

AT TIIK COUNCIL
MKKTIXG THIS (IVKMNG

At tonight's meeting of the city
council three ordinances of much
importance will be put on their third
and final reading. One relates to
the paving and grading of Osceola
street by the Atlantic Coast Line
Railroad from South Fourth street
to Henry street. One is an ordinance
requiring the Atlantic Coast Line
Railroad to move its freight depot
from Osceola street and place same
in passable condition at the intersec intersection
tion intersection of Fourth and Fifth streets.
The street-opening ordinance to
open South Fourth street from San Sanchez
chez Sanchez to Watula street will also be
pi t on its finad realing. Considera Considera-bl
bl Considera-bl i opposition to this movement has
be n raised by citizens owning prop property
erty property in the route of the proposed
new street.
The city attorney will probably
report his progress in the collection
of paving and street improvement
certificates, which has been delayed
for several weeks on account of his
inability to get together the data
necessary for making a complete report.

Eeryone Has It Within His Power
to be Happy
V celebrated French physician has
said that "a man's liver is the baro barometer
meter barometer of his disposition."
Every man and every woman
knows that a cheerful smile is a big
factor in one's success.
Everyone should know that the
disordered liver is cause .of ninety
pf." cent of human ills. Lazy over overworked
worked overworked livers are the prime causes
of headaches, indigestion, constipa constipation
tion constipation and dozens of other ills.
But the inactive liver always warn
by coated tongue, sour stomach, dull
eye and even laziness. Heed your
warning and you insure happiness
to yourself and reflect it upon your
associates. Calomel used to do.
Modern day science has found a bet better
ter better way in Carswell's Liver-Aid
which is a pure vegetable remedy on
sale under guarantee of money re refund
fund refund at 50 cents for large bottle.
Ask the Court Pharmacy about it.
1. Adv.

Thirty Bath Rooms.
Running Water in EVERY Hoom.
Rates: $1 and $1.50 Per Day.
You will like this house now, and you will
be treated right here.
$12,000 now. being spent on improving the
house. ...
Under same management as Keystone Hotel,
Fernandiha, Fla.

I nilTC TIT T (IWtl Mo Ocala,

uwwiu uunu, iiiaiiayci, Florid
:":X"::::":X"

UTILITY

The Boudoir Iron

Our Utility Iron is just the thing for the dainty pressing which the
bachelor girl, the student, the traveler or the "roomer" likes to do her herself.
self. herself. Invert it on the little gun-metal stand and it is a very efficient
s:oe. The dish holds, three cups of water, which can be brought to a
Toil in about ten minutes. The curling tong heater is of course entire entirely
ly entirely free from soot, etc.
These irons are constructed on the same "quality" plan as the larg larger
er larger HOTPOINT IRONS, and of course "are backed by the same 10-year

UNIVERSITY MEN ON A
TOUR OF INVESTIGATION
Prof. Willoughby and his seven-

J teen investigators from the Univer-
X i sitv of Florida, are but this morn-
I
! ing, through the kindness of Messrs.
jz. C. Chambliss, T. T. Munroe, Xor Xor-X
X Xor-X i ton Davis and Bruce Meffert, who
: I placed their cars at the disposal of
the party, carefully looking over

conditions at the farms of Chambliss

J,

i. I

V.

Comb to xffeiw

OUR RUILDERS HARDWARE IS RIGHT UP TO THE IjAST TICK
OF THE CLOCK IN "STYLE".
THE QUALITY IS THE HIGHEST THAT CAN HE (JOT.
THE PRICE IS THE LOWEST FOR WHICH GOOD STUFF CAN
RE SOLI).
WHENEVER YOU NEED HARDWARE, WHATEVER IT MAY HE
COME TO US FOR IT AND KNOW YOU 11 AVE COME TO THE
RIGHT PliACE.

Man! Hardware Co,

Phone 118, Ocala, Ffa.

The Management of PR. McCLANE
Medical, Surgical, Hydropathic
and Electric Institute
Announces the moving of the Institute
offices and treatment rooms to the Z. Butte
Building on Main Street, southeast corner
of Public Square, entrance between The
Murray Co., and Troxler's stands.
Larger quarters, more fully equipped jnd will be i'in
vtrietly ethical lines.
HOURS: 9 A.M. TO 4:30P.M. PHONE 335

ill

i:M.

what is being done with alfalfa,
hogs, cattle and general farm pro products;
ducts; products; then the Hiawatha Lake Stock
Farm, Glenhurst, (Capt. S. R. Pyles'
fine country place), and the Ocala
Country Club and golf links. The
professor and his young men were

i out at -. a. m., seeing the sights of

the best dairy in Florida, the Ocala
Heights Dairy, watching the milk milking,
ing, milking, feeding and general care and
conduct of this splendid dairy, and
partaking of the hospitality of Super Superintendent
intendent Superintendent Flanery in a nice early
breakfast.
As usual. Secretary Rooney, who
never does things by halves, had the
autos lined up and ready at 9 a. m.,
and a jolly bunch of interested stud students
ents students were off. Many of the young
men will graduate this term and

! some of them while carefully study study-i
i study-i ing and analyzing all the?e points of
j interest are also looking for proba proba-I
I proba-I ble openings where they can put into
I effect the splendid training they have
received under the guiding hand of
f Prof. Willoughby, and the other
j members of our splendid university

faculty. Too much cannot be said

j in connection with this public dem

onstration and study of conditions

on the many stock tarms they win
visit on this trip. I
This afternoon they are taking in
the Anthony Farms, under Mr.
Beuchler's tine management, and
will also look over the work that is
being rapidly perfectly at Oakcrest
Farm, under the scientific guidance
of Dr. Weaver, who is one of the
best posted men today in our state,
and this is to be one large acreage
that will be developed along the
most improved methods. Marion
county will then have a model farm
to which all investigators can be
taken and shown conclusive proofs
of what science can do.
Mr. Hollinrake, superintendent of
the Ocala Northern, responded at
once to the secretary's call and has
arranged a special coach and engine
to leave the Seaboard passenger de depot
pot depot at 7 o'clock' tomorrow morning

for Palatka. stopping at- Silver
Springs for the boys to see this great
wonder of wonders: then to look

over Col. Rogers farm and syrup
plant at Burbank. Fort McCoy will
be looked over. Orange Springs and
such other points along the line as
present features for study. This is

i exemplary of Mr. Hollinrake's pub pub-j
j pub-j lie spirit and enterprise and all in
j all this will imbue these young men
j with the great opportunities an 1
i
j possibilities of o :r county.
They are pronounced in their ex ex-j
j ex-j pressions cf the splendid conditions
i they have found and we're astonished
j to finl such advancement along all
j these lines of endeavor. They are
j boosters for Marion county and
! Oca'a's hospitality.

As practical proof of the fact that
Jacksonville is daily becoming more
widely recognized as the great port
and distributing center of the South

east, the Antietam Paper Company,
enjoying a national reputation as

the oldest paper house of its kind .in
the United States, has signel the
neccessary contracts for the estab-
lishing of a Southern branch in this
city, and has already shipped many I
carloads of paper representing a
stock of $200,000 tothe union termi- j

nals, which will be local headquar headquarters
ters headquarters for all Dixie.
The Antietam Paper Company of
Hagerstown, Mi., with offices and
many branch factories in several cit cities,
ies, cities, has chosen Jacksonville as its
southern distributing point for many
reasons. In addition to the most
metropolitan facilities offered south

of Baltimore in way of terminals,
this city enjoys special advantages
in the way of thru freight rates via
water transpprtation, such as cannot
be equalled by any other point en enjoying
joying enjoying the same raifcvay advantages.

, Social Local Advantages
While up to this time 'Atlanta and
other interior cities have been re receiving
ceiving receiving special recognition, very re recently
cently recently Jacksonville's exceptional ad advantages
vantages advantages for cheaper freight rates
have so impressed the big wholesale
and manufacturers of the East and
Middle West that this port is now now-being
being now-being given far greater consideration
than ever before. Times-Union.
The Star has bought most of its
paper from the Antietam Paper
for 19 years, and for the past year,
practically all of "it. They are one of
the oldest and best manufacturing
and jobbing paper houses in the
country, and their Jacksonville
branch will mean a great deal to
their friends and customers in the
extreme south. Mr. S. G. White, the
treasurer of the company, traveled
Florida for his house for a number
of years and has a warm friend in
every printing office in Georgia and
Florida. Mr. White is now staying
at the head office most of his time,
but the friends he has made for
himself and his house will stay with
them.

! Opportunity S.rS'iSef I

But you may not be that man.

4

I
Y

Y

backed your judgment

after the other man has used his and bought.

14 acres on Silver Springs road, good M Rflfl
dwelling and good well j ulIU
52 acres on Lemon Avenue, cleared and fenced.
ASK US.
Business site on Exposition Street $1,000
Two Lots in Second Ward, near Camp Heights.
ASK US.

PARTRIDGE-WOODRtfW
COMPANY

Merchant's Block

Ocala, Florida

AYEIt WILIi BUIIil) HOUSES

Mr. Schuster, who lives two miles
out cn the Bunnellon hard road, is
quite busy with new building. Hj
has twelve men busy all the time,
and is just finishing, among other
things, the large packing house for
Howell & Chambliss at Lowell, to re replace
place replace the one burned some time ago.
Mr. Schuster has a contract with Al Alfred
fred Alfred Aver to build two pretty cot cottages,
tages, cottages, as an investment, on a proper property
ty property .Mr. Ayer owns in the vicinity of

the Ocala Lumber & Supply Com

pany's plant.

WEAR DIAMONDS
"DIAMONDS" ARE THE BEST INVESTMENT. WHEN A MAN
WHO IS WEARING DIAMONDS APPROACHES ANOTHER HE
GETS ATTENTION BECAUSE HE LOOKS PROSPEROUS, THIS
PA YS. THE MOS T CHERISHED TREASURES A MAN CAN GIVE
HIS WIFE, SWEETHEART OR MOTHER ARE "DIAMONDS."
THE LUSTROUS GLITTER OF THESE MOST PRECIOUS STONES
MORE THAN ANYTHING ELSE, DELIGHTS THE BEHOLDER
AND THE WEARER.
THEN DIAMONDS CAN ALWAYS BE TURNED BACK INTO
MONEY. OUR DIAMONDS ARE FLAWLESS; OUR PRICES AS
LOW AS THE BEST CAN BE SOLD FOR.

A. E. BURNETT,

THE RELIABLE JEWELER

MERCHANT'S BLOCK

OCALA

A XEW DIKKCTOI5Y FOIt OCALA

Mr. Alex S. Murie of Jacksonville,
is in. the city a guest of the Florida
House, getting the data together for
the new city directory of Ocala to be
issued by R. L. Polk & Co., which
firm published the last directory of
the city, three years ago. Mr. Murie
will try to make the directory as
complete as possible in every detail,
and will appreciate the assistance of
the public in getting the correct
names and street addresses of every
person in town over 18 years of age.

ST. PATRICK'S DAY

COOL SPELL SUGGESTIONS.

Come wind, come snow, let Boreas blow, with robes like these
I your body will glow. We have the largest and most up-to-date
: and down-to-the-minute line of laprobes for auto and buggy that
was ever brougnt tu this part of Florida. We have overstocked
our store in them, and our greed in buying will be your gat la
coin, as we are going to sell them out at ridiculously low prices.
We also have a complete line of riin goods for your bodil pro-
tection better than insurance and doctors.

f ACCURACY

SECURITY

Marion County Abstract Company
ESTABLISHED 1SS2.
I GRAHAM BROTHERS. Lessees," t
v v
X OCALA FLA.
t i
f
V
i
jC First consideration and especial attention given to smalj tmcts.
i

NOTICE TO IWTUOXS OF
THE OCALA HEIGHTS DAIRY
Our drivers have instructions to
leave no milk unless bottles and
tickets are put out where they can
get them, so be sure you have com complied
plied complied with this rule. The driver must
account for all milk delivered and
the tickets are his only record.
OCALA HEIGHTS DAIRY,
C-0-Gt A. M. Flannerv, Mgr.

Manicure sets, pear! and ivory, in
leather rolls for traveling. See I

This :s the day of St. Patrick de
Columba, the patron saint of Ire Ireland,
land, Ireland, who chased the enakes out of
the Emerald Isle, and after whom
most good Irishmen, and some of the
bad ones, are named.
Patrick was a Roman subject,
born in Britain, about 396 A. D.,
probaMy in Southern Scotlani, near
the great wall. In one of the incur incursions
sions incursions of the Scots and Picts into
Britain, about 411, 'he was captured
and carried off. His captors sold
him to a chief of the Irish Picts, who
took him across the narrow sea to
Antrim, where he labored six years

as a Siave.
About the year 417 he escaped,
and returnei to Britain, whence he
went later cn to Rome. He had the
missionary sririt in full, and after
completing his studies as a priest he
returned to Irelpnd. where he labor labored
ed labored until his death in 4 fit.
There is a great deal of myth in interwoven
terwoven interwoven with the history of St. Pat Patrick.
rick. Patrick. About all that can be certain certainly
ly certainly alleged is that he was a hard hardworking
working hardworking missionary who gave his

life to the conversion of the heathen
in the same spirit in which our mis missionaries
sionaries missionaries go to Africa and China to today.
day. today. A great many events in the life of
St. Patrick are confuse! with those
of another missionary bishop name!
Senn Patriacc. who also labored in
Ireland about the same time.

( Foreign )
One year, in advance $S.OO
Six months, in advance. . 4.25
Three months, in advance. 2.25
One month, in advance SO

il

ADVERTISING RATES FOR POLITICAL AXXOUXCEMEXTS

The following advertising rates will he charged in the Star for po political
litical political announcements in the coming campaign. Announcements will run
from the date of insertion until the election, regardless of length of
time at these rates:

Daily
County Commissioner $3.00
Member School Board 3.00
Constable 2.00
Justice of the Peace 2.00
All -Other Offices 5.00

Those requiring over twenty lines will be charged an additional
rate on the same basis.

Weekly Both
$3.00 $ 5.00
3.00 5.00
2.00 4.00
2.00 4.00
5.00 10.00

OCALA IS AX ORPHAN

Among the cities of Florida, Ocala
is an orphan, and a red-headed one
at that.
Ocala has had- to hustle for her herself.
self. herself. She has had nothing done for
her. She has had no magnificent
patron nor political pull.
No Flagler nor Plant has built for
her magnificent hotels; no Stetson
has endowed her with an university;
no bunch of politicians has given her
a big, state-built and state-supported
school. The railroads have given
her only what they had to give to
carry on their own business, and
have taken every cent they could ex extort
tort extort in return. The nearest thing to
a godfather she has ever had has
been Steve Sparkman, who worried
Uncle Sam into giving her a federal
building,, which, after all, Uncle
Sam needed as much as Ocala.
All the tame, Ocala has done tol tolerably
erably tolerably well. Not having anybody to
do for them, her people have had to
do for themselves, anil its a good
deal they have done. They have the
most solid, all-the-year-round town
in Florida, which does business
twelve months in twelve with home
people instead of sitting idle half
that time, waiting for tourists. There
is always something doing in Ocala
sometimes it is not as well done as
it might be; but its being done.

jit is by no means the vilest. Beside,
! i t T T 1 Kill !.,.. 1 ...

i -ui. aj ijugie a uiu uctuiucs x law,
with whom are we to leavethe de decision
cision decision what papers it effects unless
we establish a board of press censors,

I Crawford motion to lay on The
j'aMe W3 lost, an 1 the resolution
! ;om!ng t-? a vote wa-s pa?ed.
j
! L:ui! Wanftd ti Make Them Pay

Mr. Duval proposed that a levy of
ote jcr rent be placed on the candi candidates.
dates. candidates. This was araended by Mr.
Walpol of Manatee to one-half of

one r;er cent, and then Loth amend- f

' rnent and original were lost, the
committee refusing to levy anything.
i

No Itinerary
The matter of the itinerary came
up while the levy was being discuss- j
e l, and the committee resolved it to j
be its ?ene that no itinerarv be or- j

dered.

Its the Star's opinion that the
committee made a mistake in not or ordering
dering ordering an itinerary, as there is no
better way of putting the candidates
in touch with the people and giving
the latter an opportunity of judging
those among whom they must select
their servants.
Xominatii Txgal Officers
Mr. Raney of Hillsborough intro introduced
duced introduced a resolution calling for the
nomination cf candidates for judges,
state's attorney, solicitors of crimi

nal courts of records, and supervis supervisors
ors supervisors of election in the primary. It
was passed as follows:
.''Resolved that candidates of the
democratic party for the offices of
judges of the criminal court of rec record,
ord, record, and supervisors of registration
in all cases where the commissions
oT the present incumbents of such of offices
fices offices expire prior to the first Tuesday
after the first Monday in June, A. D.
19 1G, be nominated in the primary
election to be held on the first Tues Tuesday
day Tuesday after the first Monday in June,
A. D. 1014, and that the names of

CHECKING ACCOUNTS,
BUSINESS OR HOUSEHOLD.
Your account, subject to check, whether large or
small, is cordially invited by the Munroe & Chambliss
Bank and you will receive that prompt and courteous
attention which makes it so satisfactory in transacting
your banking business.

Total
Res ru CPS
Over
$659,009.03

h&mbliss

INCORPORATE O

OCALA, FLORIDA

THE BEST IN BANKING."

Y

HOD

rses..aM f

the very idea of which is hateful to j such candidates for offices appear

the American people? No; the best I upon the official primary .election

way to do is to go on in our time time-honored
honored time-honored fashion and give mail priv privileges
ileges privileges to those who are able to pay
for them; and let the people decide
how much to believe of what is
printed. The people are not infalli-

Lble, but they are the best and fair

est judges of such matters.

MKKTIXG OF THE
STATE COMMITTEE

KOOXCE A CANDIDATE

Judge J. C. B. Koonce, of Bush Bush-nell,
nell, Bush-nell, Sumter county, was in the city
Monday, and authorized the Star to
announce his candidacy for the office
of state attorney for the fifth judic judicial
ial judicial circuit
Mr. Koonce is a well known and
popular lawyer. He has been one of
the foremost men of Sumter county
for twenty years, and is also well
known in Marion and other counties
of the circuit. He will be particular particularly
ly particularly strong in Sumter and Lake. He is
now county judge of Sumter, is well
recognized in this part of Florida as
an exceptionally well read attoreny.

ballot in such county in the state of
Florida where the commissions of
such incumbents expire within the
time hereinbefore designated."
A resolution was offered on the
death of J. C. Reddick of Holmes
and J. L. Kirkpatrick of Clay county,
members o.X the committee whose
death was announced to the body,
the resolution being prepared by
Messrs. Duval and Burton.

and neighbors to become a candidate j uZK v -:"-'.:KtKrr:K:::K:--:- XX-CC:--'

for countv commissioner from the C i

second district, and his announce- TTTT 71

nient for that position has been j f
made. Mr. Hutchins has been a res- j
ident of Marion county for about fif- 1

teen years and his study of public

affairs during that time has made
him specially well equipped for the
duties of a member of the county
board.

mm.

COLORED SOCIETY
NEWS A X I ) OPINIONS

COUIiTKIl FOIl COMMISSIONER

Mr. W. J. Coulter, of Blitchton,
made this office a pleasant call to today.
day. today. Mr. Coulter will announce in a
few days- for county commissioner
for the second district.

If the bill that Mr. L'Engle has
introduced into Congress, to deny
second-class rates to certain papers,
which color their news and in other
ways try to influence their readers
in the interest of the corporations or
individuals that own them, is direct directed
ed directed at the Times-Union, the Star for
once begs to differ with the out

spoken and talented congressman at j
large. It is very true that the T.-U.
suppresses some news and, unless
wa are much mistaken, colors other
news, in such a way as to mislead the
ignorant and leave the wise in doubt.
But the Times-Union is not alone in
this policy. The United States is
full of papers that do the same
thing. Some of them are backed by
the millions of capital, and lie or
pervert by a regular system. Some
are pitiful publications whose pub publishers
lishers publishers live from hand to mouth, and
dare not print any truth that would
cost them even a dollar. Some are

publications that live on class or re religious
ligious religious prejudice. Among them, the
Times-Union is comparatively clean

and trustworthy indeed, while it

may be the biggest sinner in Florida,

The State Democratic Executive
Committee met in Jacksonville Sat

urday. There were thirty-one out
of the fifty members present. Chair Chairman
man Chairman Fearnside presided.
The committee refused to levy an
assessment for campaign purposes
on the candidates entering the cam campaign
paign campaign to end with the primary in
June, and expressed itself as not fav favoring
oring favoring an itinerary for the candidates,
leaving the candidates to shift for
themselves, and speak when and how
they individually pleased.
It passed a resolution declaring
that the district judges and other
judges of record, and the prosecut prosecuting
ing prosecuting solicitors of the state should be
nominated by the people in the pri primary,
mary, primary, so far as the filling of vacan vacancies
cies vacancies is concerned within the next
two years.
It also appointed a committee of
five to serve with the chairman and
the secretary of the state executive

committee, to be known as the cam campaign
paign campaign committee, to which commit committee
tee committee will be left the details that may
arise during the campaign.

Marion Member on the Campaign
Committee
The campaign committee consists
of J. H. Burton of DeSoto, L. W.
Duval of Marion, W. S. Jordan of
Duval, Fred Myers of Leon and
Amos E. Lewis of Jackson.
Refused to Levy Assessments
The treasurer's report showed that
the committee had on hand $753.33.
It was because of this balance on
hand that the committee refused to
levy on the candidates for more mon money,
ey, money, members saying that the sum in
the treasury should be enough for
all legitimate expenses.
Knocked Out the Negro
A resolution declaring that only
white democrats be allowed to vote

in the primary and that inspectors
and clerks of the election be in instructed
structed instructed to permit none but white
democrats to cast a ballot was pass

ed. It read's as follows:

"Whereas, section 16 of chapter
6469, acts of 1913, laws of Florida,

provides the state executive commit committee
tee committee of each political party may by
resolution declare the terms and

conditions on which legal electors

shall be declared and taken as prop

er members of such party; therefore,
be it
"Resolved, by the State Democrat-

LOXO-SIGHTED LANDLORDS

We have in Florida a good many
hole's whose landlords lay them themselves
selves themselves out to please the public, to
make their guests feel at home and
desire to return. These hotels and
their proprietors are one of the best
assets of the state. Its to the inter interest
est interest of the hotels to please the trav travelers
elers travelers among home folks. A man
who once finds himself at home in a
hotel is very likely to go there again
and again, whenever he visits that
town. He likes to go where he
knows what to expect, if what he ex expects
pects expects is good.
And in the matter oftourists. a
good hotel is a public benefit. Most
of the tourists who come to Florida
are here for only one trip. Florida
is one of the resorts of the world.
Its the American Italy, and to see it
is the life-time hope of thousands of

northern people in moderate circum circumstances.
stances. circumstances. These people, when they
return home, put in a good part of
the balance of their lives telling
about their Florida trips. The places

they stop at have perhaps more in influence
fluence influence than the climate and scen scenery
ery scenery in forming their impressions,
for a person who is uncomfortable
on account of bad feeling or broken
rest isn't likely to entirely appre appreciate
ciate appreciate anything. And these people
who are here only once tell their
friends in the north with great
faithfulness to detail all about their
experiences, scenery, climate, hotels,
steamers and railroad trains. Their
friends are more influenced by this
first-hand information in their desire
to come to Florida and what routes
to follow than by any other reason.
The Star is sorry to say that some
landlords are so short-sighted as to
gouge this class of tourists out of
every cent, just because they come
only once. Such landlords should

have their eyes operated on with a
can-opener. They should also be
sent back in the woods to hack tur turpentine
pentine turpentine trees, for as hotelkeepers
they not only stand in their own
light, but are a detriment, to the
state.

The Ocala Star says: "Dixie ham hammers
mers hammers the Times-Union about its ne negro
gro negro edition straight along, but has
little to say about the negro page of
the Metropolis since the latter pa paper
per paper came out for Stockton."
Now, 1 don't believe my friend
Benjamin wrote that stuff in the
Ocala Star. I know that Benjamin
is fair and the statement above is
wrong. The tiles of Dixie show that

Dixie had contained over four col-fY

umns of "attacks" on the Metrop Metropolis
olis Metropolis for its negro society news and
these four, columns appeared in Dixie
after that "paper came out for
Stockton."
The difference. Brother Benjamin,
in the two papers is that the Me Metropolis
tropolis Metropolis publishes a lot of disgusting
rot about social stunts of negro
washer women while the Times Times-Union
Union Times-Union allows its negro editor to
abuse Southern white democrats and
advocate white teachers in negro
schools. The Ocala Star does not ob object
ject object to the negro pages, as it says

so plainly. I differ with it because
I do not believe a white newspaper
owned by white men should feature
negro society news nor allow a ne negro
gro negro editor to urge white teachers in
negro schools. The Star says my
criticisms "is a good deal of bosh."
The Star may endorse these sort of
things because it has failed to see
the negro editions of the Times Times-Union,
Union, Times-Union, which is putting a lot of
devilment in the heads of negroes. I
wish the Star could read some of the
editorials I have complained of, be because
cause because I know it would agree with me
that they are dangerous to white
men and women of the South. Dix Dixie.
ie. Dixie. The Star begs Dixie'js pardon, but
unless it greatly mistakes, Dixie has
been a right smart milder with the
Met. since that paper declared for
Stockton that it was before. We
haven't counted the lines, but it
doesn't seem to us that they are as
numerous as they were a few short
months ago.
The Star has never read the Me

tropolis' colored page, nor seen a
copy of the negro edition of the
Times-Union. The Star, which by
the way is as southern and demo democratic
cratic democratic a paper in its policy as anyone
will be able to find, has always en encouraged
couraged encouraged the colored people to build
up a society of their own. It. thinks
it is best for them to take as much
interest as possible in their church,
educational and social affairs. It is
natural for them when they have a
wedding, reception or ball, church
social or any other affair in which

they take a pride and interest, to j

I have on hand at all times
at the barns and lot on West
Exposition St., (Broadway) a
big drove of first class horses
and mules for you to make
your selections from. Every
head of this stock has been
selected by me personally in
the markets. I will guarantee
to give you as good stock at
as low price as can be had in
the state. Every animal is
warranted to be as represented.

1

Ho JJo MflsttaoDs.

Phone 356 OCALA. FLORIDA

WRITE FOR PRICES.

Dade City has inaugurated a nov novel
el novel plan to knock the "knocker."
Twenty-five dollars or fifteen days
will be the sentence imposed upon
the person who "knocks" that pro progressive
gressive progressive town. Though radical, this
departure will doubtless have a sat-

ic Executive Committee, that in ad- isfactory result. Palatka Times-

ake Weir Brick Works

STANTON, FLA.

1

Windsor : Hotel

Jacksonville's Finest
AND
Florida's Largest and Best Year
Round Hotel
The Hotel you take your Mother, Wife or Sister

Home Hotel of the State
FfATES
European Plan $1.50Per Day and Upward
A. M. Wilson, Thos. M. Wilson,
ASS'T. MGR. JPROP. AND MGR
Jacksonville, Florida

to

m

dition to the qualifications specified

Herald.

in said chapter 64 69, only white; Almost too radical to fit in with
legal electors shall be permitted to j the constitutional guarantee of free

vote the democratic ticket in the en-: speech.

suing primary."
Thanked Governor Trammell

Mr. Home of Jefferson offered a

wish to see an account of it in print. J

And if they are willing to pay to
have such things printed, and some
one is willing to print them, it
seems to the Star that it is as legi legitimate
timate legitimate to sell them such printing as
it is to sell them flour and bacon.
The Star has always held that
washerwomen, ditch diggers, roust roustabouts
abouts roustabouts and all other people who
make a living by hard work are
useful members of society and just
as honorable as those who preach,
write, expound the law or sell rib ribbons.
bons. ribbons. So the Star thinks, if a colored
washerwoman gives a party to her
friends, and can get a notice of it in
a paper that she pays 15 cents a
week of her hard-earned women for,
she is within her rights; and more

over, the Star believes that in doing j aforesaid, the Star has never seen.
znrh things shp and her neishbors If the negroes of Jacksonville are

them if they do not want to do so.
The Star thinks they would be more
pleasant and edifying to read than

the reports of crimes and punish- j

ments in which negroes, figure so
largely, and which all papers print
and all people read. It also thinks
that the attempts of colored people
to build up society among them themselves
selves themselves which society i3 bound to be
made up of their better elements,
and will need their best work of

agement of that paper has no right
to allow them to express any opin opinion.
ion. opinion. Dixie might give a few ex examples
amples examples of the stuff In this line that
the Times-Union so strenuously
strives to keep out of the hands of
white people.

The Star is glad to see the Pensa Pensa-cola
cola Pensa-cola News emerging from its finan financial
cial financial troubles. Felkel and Sanborn,
two of the brighest men on the Flor-

hand and brain to develop, is a good ida press, are doing the writing, and
sign of great improvement in the if they can't make a paper readable,
race, and deserves the approval of i its no use for anyone else to try.

white people instead of opposition I

and criticism.
The same arguments apply to the
negro edition of the T.-U., which as

! are helped and encouraged in a way

that does good rather than harm to
the body politic.
Neither can the Star see why
these notices should be an offense to

Mr. J. T. Hutchins of the Romeo

section was among the callers at the white people. They are on a page

resolution thanking Governor Tram- Star office Monday. He has been by themselves, plainly marked, and

mell for his work on having drafted persuaaea Dy many oi nis inenas uuC yt ua.c Uj w c

able to pay the T.-U. to print for
them a paper, it is all right for the
T.-U. to print it. If It is a separate
paper, they have a right to express
their views, as long as they do not
advocate incendiary doctrine or try
to stir up race hatred. If it is a
part of the Times-Union, the man

W. H. Malone, Jr., of Key West,

state senator from the twenty-fourth
district, has decided that he will
contest for congressional honors
with Claude L'Engle.

WE HAVE JUST RECEIVED A
NEW SUPPLY OF THAT JUSTLY
CELEBRATED ALPINE FLAX IN
POUND PACKAGES. THE COURT
PHARMACY. 3-13-6t

MOTHR YAI'ITT VVYY OF OCAI.A, AS ItK ILT I AST A I'TU.MX, ON HER WAV DOWN THE OKEAWAHA

State of Ohio, City of Toledo,
Lucas County. ss.
Frank J. Cheney makes oath that
he is senior partner of the firm of F.
J. Cheney & Co.. doing business in
the City of Toledo, county and state
aforesaid, and that said firm will pay
the sum of ONE HUNDRED DOL DOLLARS
LARS DOLLARS for each and every case of ca catarrh
tarrh catarrh that cannot be cured by the
use of Hall's Catarrh Cure.
Frank J. Cheney:
Sworn to before me and subscrib subscribed
ed subscribed in my presence this 6th day of
December, A. D., 1886. (Seal)
A. V. Gleason, Notary, Public
Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken inter internally
nally internally and acts directly upon the
blooJ and. mucous surfaces of the
systc Send for testimonials, free.
F. J. Cheney & Company, Toledo.
Ohio. ?-'i by al! druggists, 75
cents. Take Hall's Family Pills for
constipation. ad
Masons meet Thursday evening.

IT

J-'

I 'ADDLE WHEELS

AND PROPELLERS

CALLED FOR MUCH PATIENCE

GOOD

BUY

W0RP
;
i

se

(Continiied from First Page)

the oli chief an.1 the young chief
and' their tribes, there harJ long teen

Making of Arrow Heads Brought Into!

Requisition Ail the Art and
Skill of the Indian.

When you buy Chocolat es, of con i

i
you want the most of the be.st thu:

your money entitles you to, an
that's, why ; our "buy wcr '" .-honl

a deadly feud. They
When Okeehumkee

were enemies,
learned that

Chuleotsh ha 1 gained the affections'

always be-

j or' his beloved child, not many weeks j
; raised away before th i noble Chal-
it arah was slain. Slain too, by the

:aaer o.

Wenona. Dead! Her lover

Not all Indians can make anow
heads. This art was the special func function
tion function of the older and more skillful
men. Ishi seems to have been close closely
ly closely associated with the usual customs,
he preserves many of the more high highly
ly highly developed arts and crafts.
In the manufacture of arrow heads,
flint and obsidian were used by the
Yanas.
Obsidian is volcanic glass, occur-

Pe IP

ra

laead! Paor Wenona. Will sho; re-1 ring in parts of California in the

jtvrn to the i-aternal lodge and dwell
j among her people while her father's!

Because they ire
guaranteed to l.e

offer you the finest

a i w ay s
fr,-.-a.

re
they

I hand

Sweets prepared by
candy-makers.

the

T.

The Home of iluyler's.

aV.'ef ic-; of
world's lest

ILlJLt

tained with the

f hor lover's seal;

No.

drippings
She hur-

The Best Policy in Case
of Fire is a
Fire Insurance Policy!
Not a Blank One,
Not an Intended One.
BUT A POLICY
Duly Signed,
Sealed and
Delivered
TO YQU
BEFORE THE FIRE
It's the Only Kind
THAT COUNTS!
E. M. OSBORN,
IIOLDKIl BLOCK OCALA FLA.

o

rics away to the veil known foun fountain.
tain. fountain. It was a. favorite spot, where

her.--e3f and Chuleotah met on the j
glassy bottom of the springs. The j
pale ghost of Chuleotah stands beck- i

loning her to come. All was still
Isave the night winds that sighed and)
i moaned thru the lofty pines. Then'

came enona to the siae ot tne
spring. For a moment she paused
upon the edge of the springs, then
met palms above her head, and, with
a wild leap, she fell into the whelm whelming
ing whelming waves. She had gone to one of
those enchanted isles, far out in the

western seas, where the maiden and j

her lover are .united, and where both
have found another Silver SpriiTg.

A P.ace on The Big River
On the down trip Thursday off
Browning's mills as the City of Ocala
sped along nearing Palatka, a trim
yacht came down upon the wide St.
Johns and as the vessel tacked to
her regular course it drew opposite
and bantered Captain Mathews for a
race into port. Captains agreed, or

just as well as agreed to race, for!

the yachts raced. And the City of
Ocala slid thru the Putnam county
bridge over a quarter mile ahead.
The two yachts swung to, their ne ne-gines
gines ne-gines hooked up, Frances Webber in
the Ocala boat's hold, and I do not
know the engineer of the other
yacht, at a point nearing Browning's,
two miles above the Gem City. The
City of Ocala very cautiously, on ac account
count account of her regular daylight run
from the Silver Springs to the deep deep-water
water deep-water city, navigated on the regu regular
lar regular roundabout government course.
The challenger vessel ploughed
straight as possible for homS. But
Francis immediately touched up his
engines, and the Ocala maneuvered
around the three long bends, show showing
ing showing the other vessel her "counter"
early in the game. k. A. G.

The new cloisenne enamel jewerly
in friendship circle brooches, at
Weihe'a 3-14-6t

BEST FAMILY LAXATIVE

Beware of constipation. Use Dr.
King's New Life Pills and keep well.
Mrs. Charles E. Smith, of West
Franklin, Me., calls them "Our fam family
ily family laxative." Nothing better for
adults or aged. Get them today. 25
cents. All druggists or by mail. H.
E. Bucklin & Co., Philadelphia or St.
Louis. ad

shape of dark opaque bowlders of
small size. When splintered either
by stone mallets or by another rock
it appears as brownish or dark gray
glass, uneven in color.
Ishi breaks these bowlders by hit hitting
ting hitting them with another rock. Having
obtained fragments varying from 2 to
4 inches long to 1V2 inches wide, and
about a quarter of an inch thick, he
is prepared to flake his haka or heads.
The first flakes are large and free freely
ly freely made, calculating to give by wide
transverse lines of cleavage, and to
establish the fundamental outlines of
the point. Later these flakes are
smaller and more like finishing touch touches.
es. touches. The tool he now uses is not horn
but iron or soft steel.
Smaller tools are made of wire nails
driven into wooden handles 6 inches
long. These are filed to a flat round rounded
ed rounded point, something like a blunt
screwdriver.
In working tho obsidian this edge
is held vertical to the stone and the
shaft of the flaking tool in the plane
of the left palm. Apparently the soft
metal permits the glass to make a
small; dent in it which engages the
two and allows pressure being ap applied
plied applied to the edge to be flaked.
As Ishi develops the form of his
arrowhead to a graceful acute angle,
he changes to a finer flaking tool, and
resting the stone on his protected
thumb, he then makes the little inden indentations
tations indentations near the base, which permit
the sinew to hold the head of the ar arrow.
row. arrow. Never once during this process
does he hit or beat the obsidian. No
rough force is required, just patient,
artful dexterity and strength of fingers.

Read what two eminent scien scientists
tists scientists hve to say about Ik it
and its effect on beer in light

ass

bottl

es,

Cuff, belt and bar pins in the
beautiful new cloisenne enamel.
Weihe, the Jeweler 6-14-6t

"In recent years the observation has been made
that the rays of sunlight effect a chemical
change in beer. For this reason the use of
beer bottles blown from colorless glass is
diminishing, bottles blown from colored glass
being chosen ; the amber colored bottles, which,
when held towards the light, show the color of
light beer, are particularly to be recommended."
Extract from Die Praxis der Bierbraukunde. Published by G. E
Habich, 1883 page 786.

"It appears that chemical changes are produced
in the beer, which attains an exceedingly
unpleasant taste and a disagreeable odor."
Extract from letters cn Brewing (Vol. 5) published by Hantke's
Brewers' School and Laboratories. Dr. G. Thevenot

Schlitz, when poured into your
glass, is wholesome and pure
as a crystal spring.

OCALA SOCIAL AFFAIRS j
(If you have any items for this department call phone 106)
-
Mrs. Anderson the Honor Guest at j is an officer in the Florida Suffra-

Luncheon
Today at 1 o'clock Mrs. R. A. Bar Bar-ford
ford Bar-ford was hostess to a beautifully ap appointed
pointed appointed luncheon complimenting Mrs.
H. L. Anderson, who will return to
her home in Jacksonville tomorrow.
In detail the charming affair was
characterized by the marked inge ingenuity
nuity ingenuity of the hostess in linking the
past with the present for nearly five
years have elapsed since Mrs. Ander Anderson
son Anderson was a resident of this city and
during that space of time the bonds
of friendship, though not lessened,
have grown wider and today the new"
interests for the honoree and guests
were more closely interwoven. The
place cards were hand-painted in
forget-me-nots and the same sweet

sentiment was expressed in each
course, the china being painted in
the same pretty flower. Jardinieres
of dogwood, vases of roses and pear
blossoms adorned the rooms.
The luncheon was served progres progressively
sively progressively on five tables placed in the
dining room and parlor, the two
rooms connecting by large double
doors, and it consisted of six courses
including grapefruit cocktail, deviled
crabs, tomato salad, lemon jelly,
wafers, chicken a la king, creamed
potatoes, peas in timbals, pickles,
cheese straws, hot buttered rolls,
strawberry ice and sunshine cake.
The place cards were tied with blue
and white ribbons and after each
course those with the white progress progressed
ed progressed to the next table and those with
the blue went down one table, there thereby
by thereby affording an opportunity for all
the guests to be with Mrs. Ander Anderson
son Anderson during a course.
The guests included the very spe special
cial special friends of the hostess and hon honoree
oree honoree and were Mrs. 'William Hocker,
Mrs. Van Hood, Mrs. D. E- Mclver,
Mrs. W. K. Zewadski, Mrs. E. L.,

getie League, and "With apologies
for her politics" was the subject to
which Mrs. Carney responded in her
affable manner. Mrs. Duval re responded
sponded responded in her usual bright way to
the toast, "In honor of our new
friends present," and to Mrs. Hock Hocker,
er, Hocker, the federation's brilliant presi president,
dent, president, was accorded the honor of re replying
plying replying to "As woman will have the
last word." Mrs. Burford made a
gracious toastmaster as well as an
hostess and for the last instead of a
toast she asked Mrs. Beard, who
possesses a wonderful voice voice, to
sing "Auld Lang Sayne," which was
a most appropriate conclusion for
the beautiful luncheon.
Mrs. Burford received her guests
wearing an handsome gown of black

velvet, trimmed with black chiffon
ocer cream lace. Mrs. Anderson

wore black charmeuse with a white

chantilla lace bodice, exquisitely

fashioned and trimmed with king's

blue and jet. Completing the lovely

costume was a hat of black with

trimmings to match the gown

"We organized a fine camp at

Ocala Saturday night," said Gen. X.,
B. Forrest, adjutant general and

chief of staff, Sons of Confederate
Veterans, upon his return to the city.
Seventy-six members were enrolled
for the Ocala camp, and the person personnel
nel personnel of the membership indicates that
it is comprised of many of the lead leading
ing leading men of that section of Florida.
Jacksonville Metropolis.
While General Forrest was in
Ocala," he was the guest of Mr. and
Mrs. W. W. Harriss. He left for
Jacksonville Sunday afternoon, much
pleased with his visit. He made a
most agreeable impression on all he
met while in Ocala. "'""
f m
Misses Cecile and Grace Kimmel,
after an extended visit at the subur suburban
ban suburban home of Mr. and Mrs. C. P.

L. W. Duval, Mrs. G. S. Scott, Mrs.Nl Howell, left today for their home in

R. L. Anderson, Mrs. W. V. New New-som,
som, New-som, Miss Lula Robertson of Ken Kentucky
tucky Kentucky Mrs. Clarence Camp, Mrs. J.
C. B. Koonce, Mrs. Frank Harris,
Mrs. C. L. Gamsby, Mrs. E. P. Rentz
and Mrs. Walter Hood.
Following the enjoyment of the
deliciously prepared luncheon was
an hour spent toasting the guest of
honor, the toasts being drunk in
grapejuice which was passed after
each course. The subjects were
wisely chosen and the responses
were cleverly given, each one being
beautifully applauded on account of
its merit.
Mrs. Burford gave the first, "To
our old friends, and to one old friend
especially," and she concluded her
toast with:
"Give us old wine to drink,
Old wood to burn.
Old books to read,
Old friends to converse with."
Mrs. Van Hood was asked to toast
the native state of the guest of hon honor,
or, honor, Indiana, and in her charming
manner she spoke of the long list of
noted men who claimed the Hoosier
state as their birthplace, especially
of Joaquin Miller, of Mrs. Anderson's
distinguished father, whi was twice
governor of Indiana, and also of
James Whitcomh. Riley, the best
known living poet. Mrs. Anderson

Palatka over the beautiful
tourist route, Silver Springs
run and Oklawaha river, fam famed
ed famed in song and story as the
most wierdly beautiful water waterway
way waterway in the world. Boat sails
from Silver Springs every
Tuesday, Thursday and Satur Saturday
day Saturday morning at S o'clock.
Sails from Palatka every
Monday, Wednesday and Fri

day at 6: HO a. m. Trips made
entirely by daylight. Elegant X
a la carte service on board. :
Every accommodation, coi.-
venience and safety aopli-
ance. V
For furth r information, ap-
..
ply or write to

"-
Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Cook and
Mr. Phil Robinson returned yester yesterday
day yesterday afternoon from Inverness, where
Messrs. Cook and Robinson were
week end visitors.
'
Miss Mary Taylor is expected to
arrive Thursday from Tampa for a
few days' visit with Miss Rosebud
Robinson en route to her home in
Jacksonville.
Mr .and Mrs. Clarence Camp left
this afternoon for Asheville, X. C.
where they will spend a few days
while selecting a suitable house for
the summer.
Among the delightful outings ar arranged
ranged arranged especially in honor of Mrs.
H. L. Anderson was the motoring
trip to Lake Weir Sunday afternoon
when Mr. and Mrs. Jake Gerig had
as their guests, Mrs. Anderson and
her hostess, Mrs. R. L. Anderson.
They stopped at the Gerig cottage,
which is surrounded on three sides

by an orange grove, now white with
bloom, and the stroll through the
grove was a rare treat for Mrs. An Anderson,
derson, Anderson, for although living in Jack Jacksonville,
sonville, Jacksonville, it was the first time she had
an opportunity of visiting a grove
since leaving Ocala.
Mrs. W. H. Clark will leave to tomorrow
morrow tomorrow for Troy, Ala., where she
will visit her daughter for a few
weeks.
"'v
Mrs. Eugene Cox, who has been
the guest of her parents, Mr. and
Mrs. E. L. Wartmann at Citra since
Christmas and a frequent visitor to
Ocala. has returned to her home in
Atlanta.
Miss Lizzie E. Mallett of Fayette Fayette-ville,
ville, Fayette-ville, X. C, is a spring visitor to the
city. She has many friends here.
Miss Mallett is stopping at the res residence
idence residence of Dr. Thompson on Fort
King avenue.
Mrs. Jake Brown, who has been
quite sick for some days, is much
better.
Mr. and Mrs. C. M. Lotze of Cin Cincinnati,
cinnati, Cincinnati, are in the city for a few
Jays after a most interesting trip
thru the Everglades. Mr. Lotze :s a
prominent attorney in the bijc Ohio
city. After spending a few days in
Ocala they will go to Jacksonville
for a short stay before rettjr:::3g
home.
Mrs. E. F. Xewport, who has been
in the city for the last few days, the
guest of Mrs. R. M. Flinn, return return-el
el return-el to her home at Eastlake this aft afternoon,
ernoon, afternoon, accompanied by Mrs. Flinn.
Mrs. L. W. Harley and Mr. Roy Gal Galloway.
loway. Galloway. The party went in Mrs.

Flinn's l.sn '-zoaie new car, won in i

the Banner contest, which Mrs.

Flinn has learnei to drive with I

much proficiency.
a m
V. IK C Scholarships in the Univer

sity of Chicago
An offer has been made by the
University of Chicago, which cannot
be properly scheduled in the usual
list of scholarships. At the same ;
time it is of more significance to the
South than any single scholarship
which has at any time been establish established
ed established by our United Daughters of the
Confederacy.
The Illinois division, U. D. C. es established
tablished established a prize of $100 in October,

1912, to be given for the best doc-l

tor's thesis which should be written

by a student taking the doctor's de

gree in the Department of Southern
History in this institution. Where Whereupon
upon Whereupon the University of Chicago offic

ially declared that all Southern stu

dents admitted to the graduate

school of the university who should
undertake to write their own theses

in the department of Southern His

tory should have their entire tuition

free for the full time required for

the completion of their graduate!
work. Such a period is from three;
to four years, and the money value
is equivalent to $120 per year for

each student so competing.

When the offer was made public,

four students in this department took

advantage of it and have their theses!

nearly completed. Others are to be

gin on theirs this fall. The number

will increase each year; thus the

gift of the University to the U. D. C.

is cumulative in value.

This not only affords an oppor- j

tunity for the scholarly young men

of the South to get a broad educa

tion free of charge, but what is of i

more importance it affords an oppor

tunity for collecting and giving to
posterity rich treasures of historical

strive for the prize. For this reason
this gift is in a peculiar sense a gift

to the whole South. The Confede Confederate
rate Confederate Veteran.
St. Patrick Social
A St. Patrick social will be given
by the Epworth League March 20,
1914, at the Methodist parsonage
from 7:30 to 10 o'clock. The fol following
lowing following program will be rendered:

Your best Irish joke, by every ;

leaguer.
Vocal duet, "Sweet Aileen" Miss Misses
es Misses Nan Brooks and Susie Ervin.
Sketch of life of St. Patrick, by
Miss Agnes Krego.
Piano solo Miss Marie Burnett.
Reading from Irish melodies, by
Carol Blalock.
Song Miss Annie Pearl Liddon.
Recitation Miss Eunice Ellis.
Song by league!
Contest.
Jacksonville Asks for Next Biennial
Jacksonville, Fla., and Portland,
Ore., have both asked for the next
biennial. This is one more step for forward
ward forward for the South. To entertain the
General Federation of Women's
Clubs means the expenditure of
many thousands of dollars and al almost
most almost incomprehensible work. With
Mrs.- William Hocker, the state pres president
ident president of the state federation in Flor Florida,
ida, Florida, the work of that state has gone
forward with remarkable progress.
Mrs. Hocker is well known to the
clubwomen of Atlanta.
Mrs. Anna J. -H. Pennypacker,
president of the General Federation
of Women's Clubs, is deeply inter interested
ested interested in having the committees on
programs set aside an hour for the
federation work. This is being done
by the Florida state secretary, Mrs.
William B. Young, who is also well
known in Atlanta. Mrs. Young in invites
vites invites twelve delegates at a time to
her house and holds a federation in institute.
stitute. institute. Atlanta American.
Mrs. R. R. Carroll ani daughter
Merris. left this afternoon for St.
Petersburg, accompanying Mrs. Car Carroll's
roll's Carroll's s:?ter. Mrs. Ramsaur home.
They will visit relatives in the Sun Sunshine
shine Sunshine City for a week.
i
Miss Alice Cole of Davenport.
Iowa, was an qver-night guest of
Miss Doris Murray of In iiana. who is
visiting her aunt, Mrs. G. K. Will William?.
iam?. William?. Miss Cole and her father are
numbered among the tourists spend

ing several weeks in Flori'a andi

they come to Ocala by water from
Palatka.
...-'
Eastern Star sewing circle will
meet at Ycnge's hall on We Inesday
afternoon at 3 o'clock.

asters Cad

(Grocery epartaeitt

S'UNSMEKfE

FROM THE
THOUSAND
WINDOW
BAKERIES

BISCUITS

,

Vml

ill TUT TO) liiT

lliio iiPo Ml

1
111!!

i

i

Will
UIII1

iiim

r i m

I Ml K'

iiiio lWo

II III

i
t r
I

This is the. Only Place in
Ocala
Where you can get the complete
A?
line of these Crackers and Cakes
In both the English
and American bakes.

Masters (D)o

n

To the Investors of
Marion County:

AM proud enough of the record which the FLORIDA TITLE & ABSTRACT COM COMPANY
PANY COMPANY has made during the past two years to be willing to assume that you are
fairly well acquainted with the company and its record. If you are not, then ask the
banks, attorneys and big land owners of the County as to its work and reputation.
To develop its business possibilities to a greater degree requires a larger capital

than it now has, and to provide for such development the FLORIDA TITLE & ABSTRACT
CORPORATION has been formed with greater and broader powers and a capital of
$".0,000.00 (one-half of the total capitalization) as a Preferred 8 per cent. Cumulative stock
and will share in the further profits of the business until it may be paid 12 per cent, in
any one year.
The new Company will succeed to the old Company's plant, business and assets of
every character and every dollar of its worth will be pledged to secure the safety of the
stockholders of shares of its Preferred stock, and the annual 8 per cent, dividend accruing
thereon.
In disposing of the $50,000.00 Preferred Capital Stock, it is my desire to sell at least
one-fourth to Marion County investors HOME PEOPIiE who have a knowledge of and
faith in local conditions, the pecuniary profits as can be demonstrated hy our books, have
been thus far satisfactory and may be considerably enhanced by increased capital stock In
order to extend the business beyond its present limits.
I am so certain of financial success for all investors that I am content to take my own
personal profits from the earnings to accrue on the Common Stock of the corporation, after
the preferred share holders have been secured their profits, as above outlined.
The support thus furnished by our home people in addition to the thoroughness,
promptness and reliability of our work, as evidenced by approval of local bankers and at attorneys,
torneys, attorneys, as well as by big land owners of the County and State, will enable me to command
sufficient funds and control sufficient business, from within and without Marion County, to
make the Florida Title & Abstract Corporation, a truly State-wide, permanent and profit profitable
able profitable institution.
Your pledge to any portion of the Preferred Stock subscription made promptly, will
be appreciated.
( Youry very truly,
r. s. Roger's.
R. S. ROGERS,
Ocala Florida.
You are authorized to enter my name for a subscription of...... shares
(Par value $100.00 each) of the Preferred 8 per cent Cumulative Stock of the FLORIDA
TITLE & ABSTRACT CORPORATION.
Payment of this subscription to be male on call of. the company, in the following
manner, viz:

ALL

OR

In four equal installments, viz: On demand and in two, four and six months with interest
at 8 per cent., note to be given for the deferred payments and stock to be issued and at attached
tached attached to note as collateral security.
(Mark out the manner of payment not use3).

Name of Subscriber.

THE OCALA EVENTXG STAR, TUESDAY, MARCH 17, 1914

ANOTHER UGLY
ANNOUNCEMENTS
RORIIER INCIDENT

! i

it

l! "J lills

n

TTO 53 TTTt L

m a k

CJLOJ.1JL Li

We have just received over a hundred
Men's New Spring Suits, they are well made
and worth up to $15.00. They must be sold
in the next ten days, at only

-

All alterations will be free. In this as assortment
sortment assortment you will find only all wool mater materials,
ials, materials, consisting of serges and'fancy worsteds.

Sale Sflarts

Weill

esday,

MAM

is.

LOOK AT THE WINDOW.

T
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
Y
?
t
t
Y
Y
Y
Y

Murder and Arson Near San Diege!

Make California!! Wild to
Invade Mexico
San Diego, Cal., March 17. Mar Martial
tial Martial law was proclaimed yesterday
along the border for miles each side
of Teeate. California, following the
destruction by fire of the general
store containing the United States
postoffice and customs office and the
murder of Postmaster Frank John Johnson
son Johnson Saturday night by three men,
declared to be Mexicans.
All last night the border was pa patrolled
trolled patrolled by American troops from Fort
Rosecrans. Across the line not many
h :ndred feet away, Mexican rurales
performed guard duty.
Every man within a radius of ten
miles of Tecate is fully armed and
rifles and ammunition are being im imported
ported imported from this city.

STATE ATTORNEY

EDITOR OF FIGARRO
ASSASSINATED

!!!!

lH mw X4S m m

French Journalist Shot by Wife of
the Minister of Finance
Paris March 17. Gaston Cal Cal-mett
mett Cal-mett editor of the Figarro, shot by
Mme. Henrietta Caillaux, wife of
Joseph Caillaux, the French minister
of finance, died last night.
Mme. Caillaux went, to the office
of the Figarro to carry out an act of
vengeance against M. Calmette, who
had been waging a campaign charac characterized
terized characterized by great 'bitterness against
the minister of finance. She fired
at least three times, at M, Calmette
being wounded in the chest, in the
side and in the abdomen.

CITIZENS OF JAX.
SEEM TO RE STINGY

I

George Y. Scofleld I
I am a candidate for re-election to
the office of state attorney for the
fifth judicial circuit, and solicit
your vote at the June primary.
Respectfully,
George W. Scofield.
Inverness, Florida.

Jacksonville Metropolis: Altho'
the campaign committee, of which
Frank Chase is chairman, spent all of
the week in an earnest endeavor to
sweli the Confederate reunion fund,
less than one thousand dollars were
secured in subscriptions for the big
May event.
, Chairman Chase stated that he
was surprised by the slowness of the
public to respond to the call for
funds. t

VICE PRESIDENT MARSHALL
COMING TO FLORIDA

Jacksonville Metropolis: Secre Secretary
tary Secretary Conoley, of the board of trade,
this morning received a letter from

Thomas R. Marsh.aH, -vice president
of the United States, in which he ac accepts
cepts accepts the invitation to visit Jackson Jacksonville
ville Jacksonville on April 22. The vice president

says he and Mrs. Marshall will arrive

here on 'April 22 at 105 p. m. and

leave for the south at 9:30 the same

evening.

Thirty 30 head second hand mules will be sold at
$50 and up. Must be sold quick. Mules can be seen
at our stables.
Tompkins'& Cobb

OCALA, FLORIDA

J. C. B. Koonce
I hereby announce- my candidacy
for nomination in the June primary
for the office of state attorney for
the fifth judicial circuit of Florida.
J. C. B. Koonce.
STATE SENATE
I hereby announce myself a candi candidate
date candidate for the office of state senator,
twentieth senatorial district of Flor Florida,
ida, Florida, comprising the counties of Mar Marion
ion Marion and Sumter, subject to the action
of the democratic primary to be held
June 2nd, 1914. Glenn Terrell.
Adv. Webster, Fla.
IIOVSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
To the Democratic Voters of Mar Marion
ion Marion County: I am a candidate for
member of the House. of Representa Representatives,
tives, Representatives, from our county, in the next
legislature, and subject to your de

. M. meets on the first and third
Thursday evenings of each month at
7:30 o'clock, until further notice.
Baxter Cam, W. M.
Jake Brown, Secretary. Ad

NOT HOT AIR
But solid argument in favor of our
but solid argument in favor of our
work in automobile repairing. We
are experts, because tfe have a prac practical
tical practical knowledge of every part of the
machine and its construction. We ar
competent engineers and can do
quickly and thoroughly what it takes
the novice a long time to do indif indifferently.
ferently. indifferently. We give every satisfaction
in our labor, materials used, and
prices.

9 -Udiduc

17 N. Main Street.

SEVERE PUNISHMENT

Of Mr:. CLappeD, of Five Yean'
Standing, Relieved by CardoL

Mt. Airy, N. C Mrs. Sarah M. Chap-
fell of this town, says: "I suffered for
ive years with womanly troubles, also
stomach troubles, and my punishment
was more than any one could tell.
I tried most every kind of medicine,
but none did me any good.
I read one day about Cardui, the wo woman's
man's woman's tonic, and 1 decided to try it. I
had not taken but about six bottles until
1 was almost cured. It did me more
good than all the other medicines I had
tried, put together.
My friends began asking me why I
looked so well, and I told them about
Cardui. Several are novt taking it
Do you, lady reader, suffer from any
of the ailments due to womanly trouble,
such as headache, backache, sideache,
sleeplessness, and that everlastingly tired
feeling?
If so, let us urge you to give Cardui a
trial. We feel confident it will help you,
just as it has a million other women in
the past half century.
Bein taking Cardui to-day. You
won't regret it. All druggists.
Write ti: Chatar;ooa Medicine Co., Ladies
Advisory Deist., Chatrar.ooea, Ter.n., for Special
Imtrurtions on your cass ana 64-pice book. "Hom
Treatment tar Women," in plain wrapper. W.C. 1 24

to Mrs. Gregory for the picture she
took of the Union at the Weirsdale

school.

The ladies of the Union .decided to

place a graded chart on alcohol and
tobacco in the school.

A letter was read from Miss Xeal.
A motion was carried to order 12

new song books.

The meeting closed with a cam-

paign song by Jirs. bigmon.

Minnie D. Albertson, Press Supt.

VULCANIZING.
We are equipped with the Latest, Largest, JJest Vulcanizing
plant in Central Florida. Any sized tire handled at one time.
All work Guaranteed to )e First-Class.
Bring us your Casings and Tubes to be Vulcanized.
Worn out tires and tubes jought.
F1SK and Fl R F'CTftMF. TJRF

A Frfghtfu! Thought.
Mrs. Walback (on first ocean voy voyage)
age) voyage) John. I Just heard a man say
that if this boat was put ur on end
It would be higher than the Washing Washington
ton Washington monument. If they're going to
do anything likp that we better get
rtht r x'y

Cuff, belt and bar pins in the
beautiful new cloisenne enamel.
Weihe, the Jeweler 6-14-6t

VISIT
Ilk Mew Satool
S. M. STANLEY, Proprietor
Corner Oklawaha Avenue and Main Street.
The J. D. Robertson Building.
A Full Line of Choice
Liquors, Wines and Beer.
Courteous Service and Choice Goods Dis Dispensed
pensed Dispensed at our Bars.
Prompt attention and best of service to
all mail order business.
Some of Our Leading Brands of Whiskey:
Old Charter Oak Rye, Echo Springs Rye,
Old Anderson Corn Whiskey,
Kentucky Taylor Rye, Silver Brook,
Harlem Club, Mount Vernon,
And a full line of Gins, Wines and Brandies.
You will be welcome at my place.
Make your headquarters with

Fears That Loss of Ambassadorial
Shirt Might Prove His Ruin
Turned Out to Be Quite
Unnecessary.
What happens when an ambassador
gets superheated under the collar has
become known on more than one occa occasion
sion occasion but it remained .for the last few
days to develop what happens when
an ambassador loses his shirt.
There are countries where ambassa ambassadors
dors ambassadors don't wear shirts at least as
shirts are understood here. Indeed,
there have been envoys at Washington
who affected 'flowing robes, but that
was before the day when a million
pairs of scissors got busy on some
200,000,000 Chinese queues. Shirts are
as necessary a part of an ambassa ambassadorial
dorial ambassadorial wardrobe as of that of the plain plainest
est plainest native. Almost every Indian
wears a shirt nowadays until he joins
a circus or comes to New York, when
he must apepar in the traditional
blanket of his forefathers. And all
the excellencies that are accredited to
this country affect this garment.
So it is with that particular excel excel-lenoy
lenoy excel-lenoy who has lately been paying a
visit to New York, a habit that dur during
ing during the present administration has
gained such vogue among the diplo diplomatic
matic diplomatic corps. Among other things, this
ambassador sent to the hotel laundry
a shirt. It was one of several shirts,
and, according to the best information
obtainable, it was a white shirt.
When the "wash" came back the
shirt was not in it, or of it. It was
missing. The ambassador made a
complaint. An attempt was made to
trace the garment, but a frantic
search revealed nothing that looked
like it, except shirts that were estab established
lished established as belonging to other persons.
The chambermaid, the valet, the por porter,
ter, porter, and the employes of the laundry
were closely questioned, but none re remembered
membered remembered having seen the article.
It was with deepest regret that the
management reported to the ambassa ambassador
dor ambassador the result of the inquiry. His ex excellency
cellency excellency was wroth. He said he must
have damages; the shirt should not
have got lost. It was pure careless carelessness,
ness, carelessness, and the hotel must reimburse
him.
Wild notions as to the value of a
shirt that was good enough to be used
by an ambassador flitted through the
mind of the manager. He knew that
shirts cost a lot more in the United
States, as a rule, than in Europe, if
they are made to order, or if they
happen to be of a superior material.
He knew of hotel clerks who wore
shirts that cost as much as $15 apiece,
and who would not think of putting on
a cheaper garment. What would be
the price of shirt3 worn by an am ambassador?
bassador? ambassador? As he pondered, the ambassador
spoke.
"That was a good shirt," he said,
"and it was new. It would be only
right that I should be paid its full
value."
"And what, may I ask," ventured
the manager timidly, "is the value
your excellency puts upon the gar garment?"
ment?" garment?" "It cost me," said the ambassador,
"$1.85."
The shirt was promptly paid for.
New York Times.
True to Yankee Traditions.
A long-felt want has been supplied
by an enterprising New Jersey firmer
who owns some land of doubtful value
within easy reach of New York city.
The pioneer in a new life of endeavor
had noticed that city hunters were
greatly handicapped in their efforts
by having to tramp over a much great greater
er greater area than they should to accom accomplish
plish accomplish a very little shooting. Plainly
the situation demanded the services of
an efficiency engineer. So he as assumed
sumed assumed the job. He wire-fenced about
fifteen acres of his most worthless
brush land; stocked it with a modest
assortment of Belgian hares and per permitted
mitted permitted the idea and ground to lie fal fallow
low fallow for three years. Then he allowed
it to become known that he would per permit
mit permit "shooting over" his covers by city
sportsmen on the basis of a payment
of 50 cents for every "rabbit" shot.
Gothamite hunters jumped at the op opportunity,
portunity, opportunity, and the original genius is
now busy booking dates and collecting
half-dollars. And still there are those
who maintain that the day of opportu opportunity
nity opportunity for the man of modest means hae
passed.
Fresh buttermilk daily at Gerig'r.
Orug Store. 2-7-tf

A tobacco that is Instantly
distinguished from all others
by its fragrance.
The first time you get a whiff of
STAG, you'll go buy some.
In the pipe, in the tin, indoors, out outdoors,
doors, outdoors, its natural lasting fragrance
will win you at once and forever.

REAL vs. FALSE Economy t TM Time.
Resist the mental suggestion t curtain your regular taking of
ice until "the weather turns warin again." Your refrigerator it
going nicely now; it is well chilled and it is doing full duty as
your practical SAVER.
Don't let it lapse even a little bit it may sulk on you all tne
remainder of the season.
Maintain your regular supply of OUR ICE all through the season.
That is the way to save on y-r ice bill.
OCALA ICE &. PACKING CO